When attending events at the REDCAT rarely do I feel any disappointment. Rather I prepare myself for delightful bafflement which most likely shall coalesce into a work to move and excite.
A Pink Chair (In Place of a Fake Antique) continues such a trend. Oh yes. This, the brainchild of New York's The Wooster Group, as ever challenged preconceptions from the very start.
We begin with recorded interviews with a woman discussing her late father, a famous and challenging stage director/artist. She has agreed, as emerges in voiceover and a taped interview, to allow a theatre group access to video recordings of her father's rehearsals, especially his next-to-last play.
The press packet and program contains a lot more (and fascinating) background material but I'm just talking about the experience of watching the performance "cold."
Credit: Mary Baranov |
Furniture is moved, characters clean or talk or pose or hold up a cross and many other things in a kind of weird dance. Much as a dream, the flow of it all somehow seems to make sense.
Credit: Mary Baranov |
A theme emerged by this time, at least recognizable to me. About one of the purposes of art--the return home. As the daughter sought to return to her father, and her father sought to return to the Poland he thought he remembered, and others felt a judgment of themselves coming in arrival of a director, and the ancient Greek hero King finally ended his long quest after the Trojan War. Not a simple theme. Not a simple idea. A wild and confused and gripping tapestry of word and sound and movement.
Credit: Mary Baranov |
A song about going home. And in the singing, they seek to belong to one another, to make a home of themselves, of this ship, of this chorus.
Such a fundamental, such a complex human urge, rendering into a new form so we may know it anew.
Bravo! Bravo to the whole ensemble--Zbigniew "Z" Bzymek, Enver Chakartash, Jim Fletcher, Ari Filakos, Gareth Hobbs, Dorota Krakowska, Erin Mullin, Suzzy Roche, Danusia Trevino, Kate Valk, Elizabeth LeCompte, etc.
A Pink Chair (In Place of a Fake Antique) as of this writing plays two more performances in Los Angeles, Saturday April 14 at 8pm and Sunday April 15 at 2pm at the REDCAT, 631 West 2nd Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012.
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